Staying in Foggy Bottom.. We have visited the White House, the memorials, Lincoln Memorial, Arlington Cemetery, Air and Space Museum, Mount Vernon and Alexandria.

And yes we also visited the National Holocaust Museum.

We started off in Daniels story which was truly excellent. Even for adults it is worth a visit as it gives a good overview of the timeline of events.

Then I asked DS 9 if he wanted to go the permanent exhibition... And he did. He handled it like a champ. We avoided the films "behind low walls"... Although DS 13 watched a couple and was visibly shocked.

The room of shoes and the railway wagon (which you walk through)... Meant the most to DS 9. Visual works better than walls of text ....

Then we crossed a bridge with a glass wall on which were written the names of the Jewish European communities which were completely (100%) obliterated!!! 4 were within a 10 minute drive of our home. That really brought things home to DS 9... As he know these towns.

We finally visited the remembrance room .. And lit candles in the Auschwitz section.. Whilst there we sat and read the stories of the "passports" of people we had been handed on arrival.

By focusing on the very visual elements and seeing an exhibit which relates directly to our daily lives (the lost communities).... DS 9 could relate and was moved by the experience... We have had no issues since our visit 3 days ago.

We actually saw even younger children there too!

I am so pleased we went and it was the right thing To do for our family.
It may not be right for every 9 year old but it worked for us... Am so glad we had the opportunity.

tfc, if either of your boys have diffuculty grasping just how many 6 million is, there's a documentary called Paperclips out there. (I saw it on Netflix). It's about a school in Kentucky (?) where the seniors decided to learn about the Holocaust. They had trouble visualizing 6 million anything so they hit upon the idea of collecting paperclips. Word got out and they started getting them from all over the world. What was really special about this project was it lasted about four years and the reporters who broke the story (it went national) found an actual boxcar that had been used for transportation to the camps, got it shipped from Europe to semi-rural Kentucky where the school turned it into a memorial, filling it with 6 million of the approx. 11 million paperclips they'd collected. For me it really brought home just how many 6 million is.

BH Cee64D - 48
WW (me) - 49

All affairs are variations on a theme. No one has 'Beethoven's 5th' to everyone else's 'Chopsticks'.

Posts: 5993 | Registered: Dec 2008 | From: A better place

nowiknow23♀ 33226Member # 33226

Posted: 11:12 PM, August 17th (Saturday), 2013

So glad you had a good experience.

You can call me NIK

“The most difficult times for many of us are the ones we give ourselves.”
― Pema Chödrön

Posts: 29087 | Registered: Aug 2011

timeforchange♀ 27454Member # 27454

Posted: 3:25 AM, August 18th (Sunday), 2013

Thanks for sharing that Clarrissa.. I will see if it is available on YouTube.

The museum gave the statistic that 1.5 million children died.... And that it was the equivalent of a whole school of children being killed every day for 8 years. The kids' eyes were like dinner plates when they heard that.

“We must let go of the life we have planned, so as to accept the one that is waiting for us.”

Posts: 726 | Registered: Feb 2010 | From: Expats in Europe

stronger08♂ 16953Member # 16953

Posted: 4:04 AM, August 18th (Sunday), 2013

IMHO, history needs to be preserved. Even the bad things that have happened over the years. Too many people think that the holocaust is something that only Jews can relate to. And while it was mainly Jewish persecution, we also need to keep in mind that many other groups of people were targeted. Catholics, Gypsies, Homosexuals, Slav's etc. were all persecuted and executed. The world needs to remember these things because history has a way of repeating itself. And we never want to go there again. I'm glad you took your boy there. The impression he received will last his lifetime.

You cant eat soup with chopsticks.

Posts: 6269 | Registered: Nov 2007

UndecidedinMA♀ 33732Member # 33732

Posted: 12:48 PM, August 18th (Sunday), 2013

ITA with stronger. It was 6 million Jews but 10 million altogether.

We did the musuem a few years ago, it was one of the most powerful things I have ever seen.